RE: A big thank you on biosafety

From: Joern Schmitz <jschmitz@bidmc.harvard.edu>
Date: Fri Sep 08 2006 - 17:05:00 EDT
I totally agree: The Institutional Biosafety Committee has to look at this. 

BTW: Who has decided that the biosafety level should "only" be BSL-2 when
you are handling "bugs" that are basically indestructible? 

My gut feeling tells me that right now nobody really has any clue about any
potential longterm effects of aerosols from these specimens that you are
about to generate ...

Joern E. Schmitz, MD
Assistant Professor of Medicine
Harvard Medical School
Division of Viral Pathogenesis
Department of Medicine	     
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Research East 213D
41 Avenue Louis Pasteur
Boston, MA  02115
Phone: 617-667-5206
Fax:   617-667-8210
http://bidmc.harvard.edu/display.asp?leaf_id=4102
http://www.hms.harvard.edu/aids/programs/cfar/cores/immflowlma.htm
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-----Original Message-----
From: Charles A Kuszynski [mailto:ckuszyns@UNMC.EDU] 
Sent: Thursday, September 07, 2006 11:22 AM
To: cyto-inbox
Subject: Re: A big thank you on biosafety

I would be more concerned about the potential for aerosol production and
biosafety issues than whether you can clean the sample tube.  Your
institutional Biosafety Committee needs to look at this project and suggest
the requirements for operator safety and containment.

Charles A. Kuszynski, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Director, Cell Analysis Facility
University of Nebraska Medical Center
985816 Nebraska Medical Center
Omaha, NE 68198-5816
402 559-6299 office
402 559-6267 lab
402 980-7654 cell
402 559-4069 fax
ckuszyns@unmc.edu

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	     Anne C Avery						   
	     <Anne.Avery@ColoS						   
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				       Re: A big thank you on biosafety    




Hello,

An investigator here has inquired about using the MoFlo for sorting
prion infected material.  This will be from deer and elk with chronic
wasting disease, which is treated as BSL2, and may eventually also be
scrapie, which I think is also BSL2.

I was wondering if anyone out there has done these kinds of sorts, and
if so, what sort of containment and line decontamination they have used?

Thanks very much.

Anne

--
Anne Avery, VMD, PHD
College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences
Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology
1619 Campus Delivery
Fort Collins, Colorado	       80523-1619
voice:(970)491-1170
fax:(970)491-0603
anne.avery@colostate.edu
Received on Mon Sep 11 16:18:00 2006

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